Thursday, September 24, 2015

I have in mind a frightened Palestinian kid, probably
8 years old, being held by four Israeli soldiers, fully armed for combat. He was
so terrified that he had wet his jeans
and there was no one, no parent, pastor or city mayor to protect him and tell
him that he was going to be all right.
They knew full well that he was not
going to be all right. In fact, he was going to be subjected to isolation and inhumane
treatment. And he knew it.

Israel
has no conscience even when it comes to abusing children.

Jewish scholar and author Marc Ellis made me aware of this
when 25 years ago he wrote of a local mukhtar being ordered by an Israeli
captain to round up twelve Arab boys:

The soldiers shackled the
villagers, and with their hands bound behind their backs, they were led to a
bus. The bus started to move and after 200-300 meters it stopped beside an
orchard. The “locals” were taken off the bus and led into the orchard in groups
of three. Every group was accompanied by an officer. In the darkness of the
orchard, the soldiers shackle the Hawara residents’ legs and laid them on the
ground. Officers urged the soldiers to get
it over with quickly, “so we can leave and forget about it.” Then flannel was
stuffed into the Arab’s mouths to muffle their screams and the bus driver
revved up the motor so that the noise would drown out their cries. The soldiers
obediently carried out their orders; “to break their arms and legs by clubbing
the Arabs, to remove their bonds after breaking their arms and legs and to
leave them at the site.” Their mission was carried out.[i]

Soon after reading this, I had the opportunity to talk with Ellis.
“Did this actually happen?” I asked. “Or is this some effort to slander Israel?”
Immediately, and with tears in his eyes, he said, “I did not write a novel.”

During the first Intifada,
according to the Washington Post,
during the first 30 months of the uprising, Israeli soldiers have shot and killed
159 children and beaten thousands. More than 50,000 children were treated for
injuries, including 6,500 wounded by gunfire. The average age of children
killed was ten. What was their crime? Heaving stones, scribbling slogans on walls,
or displaying Palestinian flags.[ii] Save the Children concluded that one-third of beaten children were under ten
years old, and one fifth under the age of five. Nearly a third of the
children beaten suffered broken bones[iii]

Of course, that was twenty-five years ago. Someone said that it must have involved
extenuating circumstances. (Of course, when Israel is involved, it is always
extenuating circumstances.)

So, what has changed? According to Middle East Children’s Alliance:

Today, hundreds of thousands of
Palestinian children are growing up in decrepit refugee camps, with more
arriving every day. Meanwhile children in Palestine
continue to suffer “Israel’s
acts of aggression” in their daily lives under occupation… Just since the year 2000, more than 1,400
Palestinian children have been killed. (That’s
one child every three days for thirteen years.) Also, by the end of April, a total of 196
Palestinian children were imprisoned and prosecuted in the Israeli military
court system. Each year, approximately 500-700 Palestinian children, some as
young as 12 years, are detained and prosecuted in the Israeli military court system.[iv]

In the past year, Israel’s
abuse would include the murder of over 500 children in Gaza. According to Na’im Ateek, their crime
included being born on the wrong side of Israel’s wall, playing soccer on
the beach or taking refuge in UN “safe” places Yet, our media has little to report about the
torn and burned little bodies of innocent children.[v] Last night, children were killed as they slept
next to their parents on the floor of a classroom in a designated shelter in Gaza,” said Pierre
Krahenbuhi, the Commissioner-General of the United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestine Refugees. “Children killed in their sleep; this is an
affront to all of us, a source of universal shame. Today, the world stands disgraced.”[vi]

In addition to the deliberate killings, when Israel
demolishes homes by the thousands, uproots olive trees by the tens of
thousands, blows up sewage and water treatment plants, when over half a million
people are displaced and 10,000 wounded, it doesn’t take much imagination to
know that children suffer the most.

Then there is the burning alive of 18 month old Ali
Dawabsheh by settlers who tossed a fire bomb into his home, a bomb which also
killer both of his parents. A crime
which has gained little attention in the US media.

And even in Jerusalem.
Just last week (Sept 20, 2015) Israeli forces “fractured the skull of Mohammad
Issa, a 13 year old boy.” Two days
earlier (Sept 18) 10 year old Yousef Sami Yehya Dari remained in the hospital for nine days receiving treatment for a gunshot in the back causing painful injury
to his spleen from which he may never recover.
And last night (Sept 20) Israeli forces entered a
Palestinian family home and kidnapped an 8 year old girl and arrested three
young men. No reason was given. Even walking to school can be dangerous with
multiple checkpoints where children as young as 4 years old are subject to
bag-searches, frisking, detention and arrest by heavily armed Israeli soldiers,
who often without warning fire tear gas grenades.[vii]

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Someone said, “A fool drinks poison expecting his enemy to
die.” I can’t think of a more fitting image
for Benjamin Netanyahu. Know it or not,
he is killing himself.

There is a fascinating children’s story about an emperor who
wears no clothes. The point of the story is that the emperor walks around naked
and he is the only one who does not know that he is wearing no clothes. I think
of Netanyahu. He is drugged on his own propaganda, chosenness, power and wealth
and does not know that he is actually choking himself.

He is poisoned by his own propaganda. While the whole
world saw television images of the senseless bombing of Gaza, the deliberate
killing of men, women and children, the targeting of schools, hospitals,
ambulances, electrical and sewage plants plus the destruction of agricultural
fields, live stock and farms, Netanyahu still spoke of Israel as having “the most
moral army on globe”. He looks at
five year old kids and can only see terrorists and justifies their massacre as
an “act of self-defense”. His nation
supports two sets of laws, one for Jews and the other for non-Jews and he still
speaks of Israel as the “only
democracy in the Middle East”. He steals land, labor, and resources,
including water, from an occupied people and with a straight face calls Israel the “start-up
nation.” It is sad to see a man in power
poisoned by his own propaganda.

And Chosenness. I don’t know that Netanyahu has ever claimed
to be a religious person. However, he loves that part in the Jewish scripture about
God blessing those who bless Israel
and cursing those who curse Israel. Of course, this was recorded by a Jewish
scribe who claims to have heard it from the Jewish God in a Jewish language and
recorded it in his Jewish scared literature for all non-Jews to read and obey.

However, if we believe in monotheism, that there is one God
over all, then when Israel
celebrates Joshua’s victory over the Canaanites, was not God also God of the
Canaanites? And if God won, does this not mean that God also lost? More
to the point, even in the Jewish Bible, chosenness carries with it the basic
Jewish values of justice and charity. The land is held conditionally and is
losable.

Wow! Chosenness really gets complicated.

Most outsiders would recognize that Netanyahu is poisoned by
power. Constantly having to outdraw and out shoot
all his neighbors to survive is exhausting. There has to be a better way to feel safe. It’s an old saying, but true, that the only
way to get rid of an enemy is to make a friend of him. Israel had its chance but chose the
poison of power as a means of dominating its enemies. Thus Israel must invest more and more
resources into maintaining its military might, and like salt water, the more it
drinks, the more thirst it feels. Never
having enough power to feel secure, I wonder if Netanyahu lies awake at night yearning
for more weapons, military aid and people without conscience to maintain his
oppression of its neighbors.

When I remember how viciously the Nazis treated the Jews
less than a century ago, it is impossible for me to understand how Netanyahu
can turn around and abuse another people. He does it, not because he has a
right, but simply because he is drunk with power. His mind and heart must be so toxic until he
is beyond memory, feeling or reason.

Finally, Charity can
become an addictive poison, especially when your very existence depends upon it. Israel survivesonly by handouts from other people,
mostly Americans. In addition to the
three to six billion dollars every year put in Israel’s
cup by the US tax payer,
hundreds of private, tax free, organizations send hundreds of millions of
dollars to keep Israel
afloat. However, with the ever growing needs of American people at home, even
Netanyahu must realize that his “blank check” life line is in jeopardy. More
and more political leaders, especially Democrats, are beginning to ask why the
fourth most powerful nation in the world needs our charity.

There is no doubt that Israel has enemies. I can understand
why. I am an enemy of its policies. Yet,
having said that, I do not wish harm to Netanyahu. I would strip him of his power
if I could, which some believe would kill him, but I do not wish him dead.

Whether he believes in it or not, I believe his scripture, that
he too is created in the image of God.
And, some day, maybe late in life, he is going to be lying on a bed and begin
to feel a few qualms. Just because of the “image of God” in which he has been
created, even Benjamin Netanyahu will realize that for most of his life, he has
been drinking poison. And on that day I will feel sorry for him.

Thomas L. Are

I preached for forty three years in the Presbyterian Church before retiring. If anyone would ever refer to me as a Liberation Theologian, I would be pleased. I started blogging several years ago to express my political and religious concern for justice, especially justice for the Palestinians.